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Jade's Blog
Friday, 3 April 2009
RIAA Lawsuit & Monty Trek
Topic: Music
Okay, admittedly, I haven't exactly been keeping up with the lawsuit against 'Project Playlist'.  Although I do care about the situation, it doesn't rule my life.  I have too much to get done most of the time to let any one topic be my sole focus.  I do have other layers, after all! 

Anyway, as I was looking through Google News for topics that have been a past interest to me, I decided to enter "riaa, project playlist" in the little search box and found out that there had been some new developments in the suit.

Apparently back in mid March (yeah, I know.  I'm not exactly on the down low with breaking news), it was reported that EMI Music, much like Sony BMG last year, dropped out of the lawsuit against 'Project Playlist'.

On March 25th, Chloe Albanesius wrote and article about the news in PC Magazine's official website "PCMag". Below is the original article unedited (Source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2343832,00.asp):

EMI Allows Content on Project Playlist, Drops Suit
By Chloe Albanesius

EMI Music has reached a deal to distribute its content on Project Playlist, and has dropped out of a lawsuit against the music Web site.

Project Playlist, which allows its users to compile playlists from music on the site, will now offer access EMI's catalogue, the companies announced Wednesday.

On Tuesday (March 24th), EMI withdrew from a lawsuit against the Web site that was filed by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in April 2008. Nine record labels, including Warner Bros. and Atlantic Records, remain a part of the suit.

"Making our music available on a fan favorite like Project Playlist is part of EMI Music's mission to connect artists and fans and to give fans more ways to discover new artists," Ronn Werre, president of EMI Music's Music Services worldwide, said in a statement.

Project Playlist is growing in popularity, Werre said, and "our artists also know that word-of-mouth among friends is a powerful part of music discovery."

"It is crucial for us to continue connecting our users with more of their favorite music," Owen Van Natta, Playlist CEO. "This partnership will provide us with a wide-ranging selection of content to satisfy our users' appetites to share and purchase music."

In December, Sony BMG agreed to make its entire catalogue available on the site. At the same time, however, social networks like MySpace and Facebook blocked access to Project Playlist. Members had previously been able to embed playlists into their profiles.

The RIAA reportedly contacted Facebook last summer about removing the Playlist application, and made the request again in December.

The RIAA lawsuit said that Project Playlist's business model "amounts to nothing more than an enormous infringement of [RIAA members'] copyrighted sound recording for [Project Playlist's] gain."

Playlist is "well aware" that its activity infringes on copyrights, but still "aggressively touts its service as a legitimate enterprise," the suit said.
(End of article)

Don't worry, I'm not going to step onto my soapbox. I've made it clear in previous posts on my blog that I disagree with the lawsuit. There's no sense in beating a dead horse.

However, I would like to briefly address the legal issues at the core of this lawsuit.

The Record Industry Association of America (RIAA), maintains that Project Playlist is in violation of copyright laws, which although it may sound "cut and dry", in the world of cyberspace it is anything but.

Copyright provides protection to authors/artists for all forms of "intellectual property" by United States law (title 17, U.S. Code). This includes, but is not limited to, novels, artwork, photographs, music, video and movies (to name only a few).

Project Playlist maintains that it has legal immunity from Copyright infringement under section V or the "Communications Decency Act" (CDA).

"What is the CDA?", you might be wondering

The CDA was originally a law passed by Congress in an attempt to regulate pornographic material on the internet. Due to a lawsuit in the Supreme Court (ACLU vs. Reno), the law was partially overturned. What essentially remains of the law is as follows:

Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996):

No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.

The defense of Project Playlist is basically this; Since the music files that they provide come from content hosted on external providers and they do not personally host any music files on their servers, they cannot be held liable for copyright infractions said external provider may or may not have made.

In layman's terms, "www.JohnDoe.com" uploads "Queen - Don't Stop Me Now.mp3", and posts (publishes) it on their website without obtaining Queen's written permission or paying royalties. Said mp3, which is hosted and published on "www.JohnDoe.com", then appears on the Project Playlist search engine (Since Project Playlist is a "fileshare" service and does not personally host or publish music files on their website) and is made available for users to add to their personal music player lists via the "www.JohnDoe.com" website. Since "www.JohnDoe.com" is the publisher and host of said mp3 they are in violation of Copyright law, not Project Playlist (according to CDA guidelines).

It would be like Google being sued because a writer found a link through their search engine to a complete unauthorized version of his book.

Anyway, I clearly side with Project Playlist on this issue. This is why I refuse to have the "MySpace Music" widget on my website. Many of the record labels that provide their music with the option of purchase on MySpace Music are the ones involved in this lawsuit so, as protest, I have chosen for my profile to remain silent.

Okay, so enough of that. I give you Monty Trek:


Brightest blessings.

Posted by spiritiger at 10:08 AM
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Wednesday, 1 April 2009
Star Wars: The Television Series?!
Topic: Movies, Television and Celebriti

My blogs have been entirely too serious and too long as of late, so I've decided to take a break from all of the controversial stuff and, instead, focus on the more light-hearted side of things.

There might be a few "Youngins" out there who might not know what the hell "Dallas" is, for you I give the following short (No, I swear!) summary:

"Dallas" was a nighttime soap opera from the 1980s about an oil family that lived on a ranch called "South Fork" in Dallas, Texas.

For more details about the series and characters, feel free to visit the following link: The Official Dallas Website For The Hit Television Series

Now I give you what "Star Wars" might have looked like if it had been put on television in the 1980s. Enjoy!


Brightest Blessings!


Posted by spiritiger at 8:11 AM
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Tuesday, 31 March 2009
Free Speech
Topic: News, politics and Activism

Ken and I have always been political minded people, and though we agree on most issues, occasionally we do find ourselves on different sides.  Unfortunately for Ken, we often find ourselves debating when he would rather be sleeping because he has work the next morning, but I'll take whatever edge I can get (grins evilly).

Last night, Ken and I watched a video on "YouTube" from the RutherfordInstitute's Channel on the lack of free speech for young people in the school system.  Here is the video:


Because Ken and I feel very strongly about constitutional rights, I was surprised to find how different our point of views were on this topic.

Before beginning to share my opinion about the stance Mr. Whitehead takes on the first amendment, I want to talk briefly about proselytizing.

All of us have, at one time or another, found ourselves at the other end of a conversation that usually starts with something akin to "Have you accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal savior?" and eventually leads to "burning in hell".  I admit, that as a Pagan, my teeth are on edge when I find myself in this situation as I have no desire or motivation to turn my back on what I believe in, no matter what scare tactics are used against me.  Depending on my mood or their attitude, I am either polite in expressing this, or down right rude.

Christians and those who follow similar religious beliefs have a right to tell me their opinion about their God, his associates, and his book because they have the right to free speech.  A right that is guaranteed and protected by the Constitution.  On the other side of the coin, I too have the right of free speech and can tell them my opinion about their religion and the evident pompous hypocrisy that I feel exists within their churches.

Now back to the video.

Where Ken and I found we had a difference of opinion was at around 2:47 seconds in the video where Mr. Whitehead discusses an incident that happened at a school sponsored public assembly, more specifically at a commencement ceremony, involving a student named Britney McColm in which her school asked her to give a speech about what was important to her to her fellow classmates.

Before the planned event, students who were to address the assembly were asked to submit their speech to the education board.  When they saw the word "the Lord" and other spirituality based dialogue, they edited out those portions and she was told that she could not discuss her religious beliefs in her speech.

Aware of her first amendment rights, she ignored the education board the night of commencement and the moment she uttered the words "the Lord" her microphone was immediately shut off by one of the school faculty members and she was not allowed to continue.

Ken, much like I imagine many Pagans and Heathens, has the opinion that the school had a right and should have censored Ms. McColm.  He believes that religious ideals have no place at a school sponsored event, most especially in regards to public schools which are considered government institutions.  The word "government" being the key in that sentence since the first amendment also guarantees that government "shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" (see also the "Establishment Clause").  Hence the reason that religion is neither endorsed nor taught in public schools.

However, the way things have been rewritten in history, this portion of the first amendment has become muddied in my opinion and can fall into a sort of grey area.  Most evidentally in the re-wording of the "Pledge of Allegiance" in the 1950s to include "under God" after "one nation" and the addition of "In God we trust" on our national monies and now on license plates here in the state of Indiana. 

How can government claim that it prohibits the creation of a national religion through the first amendment and yet let Christian religions have such strong influences in national policies created by government officials, our national pledge, and monies circulated the the government body of the United States Treasury?  I'm sure political intimidation and sizable monetary donations/endorsements had a great deal to do with it.  It doesn't take a genius to figure out.  But, I'm rambling, so let's get back to the topic of Ms. McColm's commencement speech.

My position is this:  So long as the speech was about how her spirituality has influenced her personally in the choices she's made in what direction to follow in regards to her education and not a sermon to her fellow students
proselytizing that they should give themselves over to the God that she believes in, I don't see a need for censorship.

So what if she believes that the God she follows guided her to make the right choices for her in her life?  Don't we Pagans feel that our many deities have watched out for us in times of adversity?

I find it amazing sometimes that  most of us who fall under the category of "Pagan" have no difficulty accepting and embracing our own spiritual differences in beliefs, deities, or culture (I mean, let's face it, no two Pagans/Heathens are completely alike), and yet become so adversarial when it comes to Christians and there sets of beliefs.  Whatever happened to the concept of "Namaste" which loosely means that "the divine in me, recognizes the divine in you"?

Yes, it is monumentally annoying to be preached at by a Fundamentalist/Evangelical Christian about God, Jesus Christ and their often over dramatic concern of the damnation of my mortal soul and the assumption that I am ignorant of the teachings of the bible.  Believe me, there are much more productive uses of my time.  But where is the harm?  What does it hurt, besides maybe my ears, figuratively speaking?

We have become so lost in the sea of "political correctness" that we now risk drowning, in my opinion.

Hearing the words "God", "Lord", "Jesus Christ", "Bible", "Devil", and "Hell" will not shatter anyone into a million pieces.  They're just words.  They don't have that power.  I don't condemn these words or fear that they will seductively influence me to change the course of my life either spiritually or intellectually.  No word, verse or individual has the power to change what I believe.  The only one with the power to change what I believe, is me.

Any Pagan or Heathen that has a fear that anyone proclaiming to be Christian has the power to influence what they personally believe when they proselytize, doesn't have faith in or an emotional connection to their chosen path or spirituality to begin with.

I don't believe that there is anything wrong in any individual expressing to those around him/her what has personally influenced them to stay straight and true to themselves; be it religion, spirituality, a deity, a person, a motto, a book, a movie, or even a song.  If it has positively effected their lives and made them happier people for it, why shouldn't they share it or talk about it with others?  I can celebrate that they have found a path that gives their life a sense of fulfillment and peace, and can do so even if their path is different from my own, without feeling threatened.

Yes, yes, I know.  I'm a hippy.  I probably always will be.  I make no apologies.

Finally, I want to discuss the constitutionality of the speech Ms. McColm was denied in giving at a school sponsored event, since that is what is really at the heart of things.

Although she attended a public high school which is a governmental institution or entity and the commencement ceremony falls into the realm of a school sponsored event, Ms. McColm's first amendment right of free speech was unequivocally violated.

The Establishment Clause of the First Amendment was put into place to prevent our government from recognizing any one religion as our country's national religion.  The clause is as follows:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

James Madison's early draft of the amendment addresses the issue further in saying, quote:

"The Civil Rights of none shall be abridged on account of religious belief or worship, nor shall any national religion be established, nor shall the full and equal rights of conscience be in any manner, nor on any pretext infringed. No state shall violate the equal rights of conscience or the freedom of the press, or the trial by jury in criminal cases."

Due to the fact that public schools are governmental entities, the Supreme Court in 1962 (Engel v. Vitale) supported banning prayer in classrooms, and prohibiting the teaching of religious beliefs as it constituted governmental endorsement of religion.

A presiding judge, Hugo black, who supported the ban wrote:

“… the constitutional prohibition against laws respecting an establishment of religion must at least mean that in this country it is no part of the business of government to compose official prayers for any group of the American people to recite as a part of a religious program carried on by government."

To put it bluntly; public school teachers and faculty are considered representatives of a governmental institution.  As such, they cannot lead students in prayer, or teach the beliefs or ideals of a specific religion.

However, neither the Supreme Court's 1962 decision nor the Establishment Clause can be attached to students attending public schools as they are not governmental representatives/employees.

Therefore, when Ms. McColm attempted to give her speech in which she uttered the words "the Lord" at her commencement, she was not violating the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment and had every right to execute her right of free speech guaranteed by that same amendment.

So then it becomes a matter of what is or isn't "appropriate".  I hate subjective arguments.

Had the microphone been turned off after some kind vulgar obscenity like perhaps an "f-bomb", after a personal attack against an individual or group (religious or non-religious) motivated by racism, homophobia, hatred or ignorance, or after some other type of hate mongering/divisive espoused opinion, I wouldn't protest the school's decision.  That kind of speech is unarguably inappropriate for a commencement speech.

However, that's not what happened here.  She was censored because she said two words that revealed that there were Christian overtones to her speech that might possibly offend someone who doesn't share the same philosophy or ideology as the Christian church. 

Was this inappropriate for me personally, as a Pagan?  Hell no.  Unless the words "may you smite down the non-believers into the bowels of hell to burn forever!" came after the words "my Lord", would I give a damn, to be brutally honest.

If Ms. McColm had proselytized her beliefs during her speech and I had been in attendance, you can be damn sure I would have expressed my disagreement to her personally once the ceremony was concluded.  After all, I too have the right of free speech.

I have absolutely no problem in telling a bible-thumper why I have no interest in his God or his religion and I have no problem in turning my back and walking away from someone that asks me "Have you been saved?".  I have that right, and he has the right to speak freely.  If you take away that right, however, then I have a problem.

This is sure to be an unpopular view, given that I am a Pagan defending the rights of a young Christian. But, I stand by my opinion and the rights guaranteed to all under the Constitution.

Brightest Blessings.

Posted by spiritiger at 8:18 AM
Updated: Tuesday, 27 October 2009 5:51 PM
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Sunday, 29 March 2009
Octo-Media Whore & The Ryan Moats Tragedy.
Topic: News, politics and Activism
I will try to make this as short and to the point as possible as my blog entries seem to run a little long, but no promises.

Octo-Mom and her Brood:
I have avoided talking about this as there is entirely too much exposure to this insane woman's story as it is, but the latest news about the "Angel's in Waiting" fiasco has finally figuratively poked me enough that I finally had to give my opinion on this ridiculous situation.

1) Nadya Suleman has claimed that she never intended to get pregnant with eight babies.... and yet, she and her fertility doctor implanted an unethical number of embryos in her womb knowing that she had six children (two of them "special needs" children, and two of them young twins) already, no job/source of income, and living in a inadequately small home provided by her father.

That's not a mistake, that's a plan. 

Ms. Suleman herself has admitted via one of the MANY video interviews she's done that before she got pregnant the disability she had been living off of (She had also been living off food stamps from the state of California and receiving benefits from Med-Cal) was about the expire in few short months.  How do you support six children, two of them "special needs" children when there is no money coming in anymore? A gamble of having multiple births to gain the attention of the world and, more importantly, the world media doesn't seem like a bad plan when deals involving serious money will undoubtedly come rolling in.

2) Nadya Suleman claims that she is not depending on tax payer money to support herself or her children and that she is supporting her children completely on her own and added "I don't want to depend on tax payer's money".  (Source: RadarOnline.com, Nadya Suleman's Video Diaries, Entry - Exclusive: Octo-Mom Defends "Angels" Firing: "They Were Toxic" at http://www.radaronline.com/exclusives/2009/03/exclusive-octo-mom-defends-angels-firing-they-were-toxic)

And yet.... there is still an active website (sanctioned by Nadya Suleman herself) at http://www.thenadyasulemanfamily.com that requests donations of money and items for the family.  It even provides a paypal link so that you can donate directly.

So, if she is perfectly capable of providing for her children on her own, than why is she and those under her direction still asking for money and donations?  Why are friends and associates of Dr. Phil furnishing her house and the nursery? Why are non-profit nursing organizations providing care instead of paid by the hour nannies?

Either she is a liar or a con artist... perhaps even both.

3) Nadya Suleman fired the "Angels in Waiting" (An non-profit group of nannies and nurses headed by Gloria Allred) who was providing round the clock care for her premature babies.  In the wake, Nadya has callled them "toxic" and they have made allegations of neglect and tuberculosis exposure.

Wow.... who do you side with on that one?  On one side you have Nadya Suleman, and on the other Gloria Allred?  I mean, both are pretty much media whores with their eyes mostly on the prize of dollar signs than the ideals of right and wrong.  So I choose not to have an opinion either way until a more respected/reliable person or agency can thoroughly investigate the matter.

In conclusion, you can't have your cake and eat it too.  For her to cry crocodile tears and say she wishes and remains hopeful that the media frenzy will die down and her life will return to normal (whatever that once was) and yet regularly appear in a video diary of her life on RadarOnline.Com (which I am sure she is getting paid handsomely for) is hypocritical at best, detrimental and permanently damaging to her children at worst, and that's the real crime in all of this mess. 

The effect that all of this publicity, all this "transparency" (which seems to be the latest buzz word) is going to have on the future of all of her children, not just the babies, is going to reap devastating results that will have their therapist's ears ringing for years.  I guess taxpayers will foot the bill for that one too.

Ryan Moats Detained While Mother-In-Law Died In Hospital:
For those of you who don't care for sports, Ryan Moats is a back-up running back for the Houston Texans (NFL).  Even some sports fans, because he is not a "starter", are probably unfamiliar with him aside from those following the recent news this month.

While en route to a hospital, in which Moats was speeding and ran a stop sign and a blinking red stop light while exhibiting his flashing hazard lights, Officer Robert Powell pursued Moats until he came to a stop and parked in the hospital parking lot. 

Four people exited the vehicle; Ryan Moats, his wife, and two relatives, at which time Officer Powell allegedly drew his sidearm and commanded them to stop.  Moats' wife then said "My mother is dying" and she and another female relative ignored a repeated command to stop and entered the hospital leaving Moats and a male relative of her's behind to deal with the situation.

Ryan Moats continually tried to explain to Officer Robert Powell that his mother-in-law was dying, who seemingly seemed indifferent to his situation and in fact talked over Moats several times.  Over 16 minutes, of commands to "shut up", lectures, a discussion with a Plano police officer of past pursuits and nonsense not related to Moats being pulled over, more lectures he was finally allowed to enter the hospital at the added behest of a nurse who informed Powell that Moats mother-in-law had "coded" (Code Blue, patient dying) three times.  She had, sadly, died before Moats was allowed to leave the parking lot. - Source: YouTube, Robert Powell Ryan Moats Dash Cam Video 1 & 2;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQFGzaYZV2A
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syF2w0u5Bos

There are, without a doubt, going to be two distinct camps on this issue.  Those that believe that Officer Powell was overzealous and lorded his power unnecessarily when he detained Ryan Moats, and those that believe that Officer Powell acted accordingly within the boundaries of police procedure.

I find myself kind of in the middle on this one, with my foot firmly planted on the side of Ryan Moats.

Lets start with Officer Robert Powell.  He is parked off road somewhere watching for speeders/automobile law violators.  A dark colored SUV with its hazard lights flashing comes speeding past, running two stops in the process.  He pulls out in pursuit with sirens active. 

Rather than stopping immediately, the vehicle continues on course.  So Powell's adrenaline starts to pump as a result of emotions from both anger and fear.  The question of "Is he going to run?" obviously had to have popped in his brain as he is a police officer and this kind of scenario is taught in the academy.  So adrenaline and mind racing, he follows the vehicle into the parking lot where it comes to a stop, and four people immediately exit rather than remaining in the vehicle (which we are all taught to do).  He too exits his vehicle, allegedly with weapon drawn and commands everyone to stop.

Now given that we see officers everyday who are shot and killed while during traffic stops, everything Officer Powell does to this point makes sense to me.  The vehicle failed to pull over to the side and stop immediately when Officer Powell initiated his sirens, and when it finally did stop, four people immediately exited the vehicle.  So there had to be some question in the officer's mind on what potential danger he was walking into.

This is where the logic ends however.

As soon as Ryan Moats, his wife, and two relatives exit the vehicle Mrs. Moats says very clearly, "My mother is dying" and it is obvious, well at least to me, that the emotions of all four seemed to verify this. 

At that point, in my opinion, a light bulb should have gone off in Officer Powell's head (Flashing hazard lights, speeding towards a hospital parking lot... hmm this must be some kind of emergency).  But, rather than pausing and taking in what Mrs. Moats was saying and looking around at where they all were standing, he dismisses her and in fact continues on in ranting about the "red and blues" (sirens).

This officer was so caught up in himself and his own emotions of anger that he didn't feel the pain and emotion of Moats or his family who had a loved one that lay dying, and he had over 16 minutes to calm down and figure that out once it was clear that there was no threat or danger.

Now for some arguments of comments I have seen posted all over the internet:
1) Powell should have realized it was an emergency when he saw the flashing hazard lights.

Flashing hazard lights do not mean "I am on the way to the hospital, please ignore my traffic violations" they simply are a warning to other drivers/vehicles to exercise caution when approaching.  I seriously doubt Powell has ESP.  There is no way he could know what the situation was.  Moats was still speeding and, to the officer's perspective, driving recklessly since he had ignored stops.  This was more than enough due cause for Powell to pull over Moats.

2) Moats and his family should not have immediately exited their vehicle.

This is true as far as procedure goes, however procedure rightfully takes a back seat when the clock is ticking and your main concern is to just get to the bedside of a loved one who is dying in order to share a few precious moments in just saying goodbye.  If it had been me, I too would have jumped out of that SUV and been running for the hospital door, I think anyone would.

One more thing, and then I swear I'm done... no, really.

While browsing Google News about the Ryan Moats story I happened across and op-ed piece on the Bleacher Report website by "BHL" (Whoever that is, nice to know he stands behind his opinion enough to use his full name).

The title of the piece is called "Ryan Moats Saga an Unfortunate Reality: Police Are Guilty Until Proven Innocent" (http://bleacherreport.com/articles/146534-ryan-moats-saga-an-unfortunate-reality-police-are-guilty-until-proven-innocent)

In it he sort of moderately decries the public for accusations of brutality and generally condemning the actions of police officers.  Sort of an attempt to shame those refusing "to see through things through the officer's eyes before passing judgment" yadada yadada.  Feel free to check out the address above if you want to read the full piece.

It's his opinion, he has a right to have it (( shrugs)).

There was only a portion of it, that I really took issue with.  Upon recalling a police chase he and co-workers watched on television in which officers threw two suspects to the ground at the end he said the following (his words):

"My jaw dropped. These two dirt bags just drove through traffic at over 90 miles per hour, nearly took the lives of many innocent bystanders all while disrespecting the authority of police in leading them on what seemed like an endless chase.

And the police should be "nice" and "gentle" to these jerks? Are you kidding me?

I'd be all for the officer pummeling someone in this scenario, and even shooting them. If you're willing to drive your vehicle at over 90 miles per hour, running away from the police, through public, you do not deserve to breathe another minute, let alone be treated "nicely" by the police."

Wow... nice to know that after figuratively waving his fist in the air about the lack of perspective in looking through the eyes of someone else, he has absolutely no problem judging the suspects to the point of sentencing them to death.  Classic hypocrisy.

It is the job of the police officer to "protect and serve" the public (you me, and even the suspect) and to enforce the law, not to execute the law.  It they had that power, we would exist in a "Police State" (a country that maintains repressive control over the people by means of police or secret police. See also Authoritarianism.) similar to Nazi Germany and the SS, rendering the judicial court system, the right to legal defense, and due process null and void.

We are guaranteed certain rights by the Constitution, one of the most important being the sixth amendment - Rights of Accused in Criminal Prosecution.  It reads as follows:

In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.

As one of our founding fathers, Benjamin Franklin, once said, "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."

Just something to think about.

Brightest Blessings.

Posted by spiritiger at 12:58 PM
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Saturday, 28 March 2009
Stupid should hurt.
Topic: Blogging

I dare you to get through the entirety of the video below. I warn you, it will be 8 minutes and 30 seconds you won't get back.

Now, I don't know if "Jesusophile" is a YouTube Troll (someone who creates purposely controversial vblogs in order to generate hits on his YouTube channel), a satirist, or an idiot that is easier to program than a VCR.  But, I have never laughed so hard at something that seemingly was never intended to be funny.  My favorite of course being when he said "Giraffes are stupid", but kudos to the idea of giraffes with wings too, there's a vision that will be with me for awhile.

Apparently this nice, if not naive, young man from the Netherlands is unaware that there is, in fact, evidence of evolution... it's called, FOSSILS!! (( eyeroll ))

The funniest, if not the scariest thing, about this is how many people have actually joined his channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/Jesusophile.  Nearly 1,000 and still growing and was awarded the "#72 Most Viewed (This Month) - Netherlands".  But then, its really no wonder when you see his other vblogs with titles such as; "Why Condoms Don't Really Offer Protection Against STDs", "Why Homosexuality Is Against God's Will", and "Why Its Okay For Sex To Hurt the Vagina".   All of which I felt might be too controversial to include in this blog.  However, if you would like to have a good laugh at the stunning stupidity, and have the time, please feel free to give them a watch as well.

From what I've read of the comments that "tubers" have given, the consensus seems to be that he is a satirist, although the user "Jesusophile" has never confirmed or denied this.  If this is true, he gives one stellar performance.  I admit that I am often gullable, but to me, at least, he appears to be genuine in his sincere belief in what he is saying.

The problem with videos like the one above is that, without a disclaimer stating that what you are watching is either humor or satire, it can be assumed that what you see is what you get.  This can be potentially dangerous if the viewer is swayed by what he/she sees and takes what is being said to heart without any benefit of being educated by facts.  Most especially when it comes to the subjects of condoms, sex, homosexuality, and female sexual identity.

There is enough misinformation and prejudice that exists in our society already.

In conclusion I leave you with the following:


Posted by spiritiger at 9:09 AM
Updated: Tuesday, 27 October 2009 5:39 PM
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Wednesday, 25 March 2009
PSG Confirmation!
Topic: Life
Our PSG confirmation arrived in our email today!  Now, if I can just remember to bring my ID this year when checking in at the gate I'm all set
(( laughs )).

I can't wait to see everyone again!

Posted by spiritiger at 2:39 PM
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Tuesday, 24 March 2009
The Day After.
Topic: Life
Well, it's the day after I found out about my Aunt's death and though I am not exactly 100% yet, I do feel a little better.

I have the blessings of having a wonderful partner, son, and very caring friends.  To Scotty and Caitlin, thank you.

When Ken got off from work last night he was sweet enough to bring home a sack full of "comfort food".  I guess everyone has their guilty pleasure.  For some its ice cream, others cake, for me... well it's chicken mcnuggets.

Today has been an odd day for me.  Not good, not bad, just sort of full of contemplative thoughts that are jumbling around in my brain.  I guess, I'm just trying to make sense of it all, if there is any.  Let me see if I can explain...

You see, before my Aunt passed away, I had been trying to balance the scale on a separate though similar situation and dealing with it the way I always seem to deal with things; silently, in my heart and head, but not so much out in the open.

About a year ago, more or less, a former friend of mine had been diagnosed with treatable Lung Cancer.  She was considered very lucky at the time because it was discovered early.  However, and I don't know the medical technicalities although I do know it is rare, the cancer moved to her brain and formed a tumor.  She wasn't given a good prognosis.  Surgery was scheduled, but the chance of success is minimal.  As I am writing this she is lying in a hospital with a 50/50 chance of surviving.  She is a few years younger than I am and has four children.

I have had mixed feelings about it.  Don't get me wrong, I believe it to be a sad and terrible situation and my heart goes out to her, her present husband and her children, two of which used to be playmates of my son.  Though our friendship ended on rocky terms, I have never and still don't wish her ill will.  My confusion has been more about how involved I should be in all of it and now with the death of my Aunt it just seems to be magnified.

I won't go into specifics, as it was many many years ago and the history isn't relevant anymore.  Save to say we had a disagreement about something, in retrospect, that was very insignificant but at the time seemed an important drama.  Neither one of us ever picked up the phone to talk to the other about it.  Two or three years passed, and her mother (whom I was also close to) died.  I went to the funeral to pay my respects to the family, she and I talked, dealt with it briefly in a kind of "I'm okay, you're okay" way and tried to be friends.  But it just didn't work.  She and I were just too different and after the years that we hadn't communicated we seemed even more so.  We just quietly and without anger went our separate ways.

It was difficult, as her husband was a good friend of mine but there was no sense in she and I pretending that the friendship was still there.

So fast forward a bit.  She and her husband divorced and she remarried a person that was in mine and Ken's former group of friends.  Her husband and I caught up with each other and I, whether I liked it or not, got first hand information about how ugly the aftermath of the divorce had gotten.  Always aware that the truth is somewhere in the middle, I avoided taking any sides.  However, I would be lying if I said that what I was hearing left anything but a poor impression of my former friend.  It's strange how no matter how far apart you make yourself from the people in your past, you still find yourself in the circle of information nonetheless.

Okay, so now that I have blathered on, my only real problem (if it can really be called that) I had with my former friend (and her sisters) involves her mother, whom I also considered a friend.  Every Memorial Day, I visit her mother's grave to place yellow roses (her favorite), clean her plaque, and talk to her.  I'm the only one who visits her grave.  The reason I know this, is from talking to the caretaker after the bronze vase from her plaque disappeared.

Now, I'm not angry at her or her two sisters for not visiting their mother's grave.   Without going into details, I know all too well the history there and they have more than anyone a right to their choices.  I guess, I had hoped the years of getting older and being a mother herself and knowing just how hard that can be sometimes would have softened her more.  I don't hold it against her or her sisters, however.

So, getting away from the tangent and getting back to my confusion over the situation.  I guess I've felt that going to her now, given that we aren't friends anymore, would be hypocritical and more than a little unfair to her.  I had no inclination to get in touch with her and renew our friendship before any of this happened, so to do so now just seems disingenuous.  I do care, very much.  It would be impossible, given our history, not to.  Perhaps that's why there is always that little voice of doubt in my head that asks "Are you doing the right thing?".

Something I have learned the hard way is that second thoughts are too late in coming when someone dies.

Either way, given recent events, I don't think I'm in any frame of mind to make any right decisions.  Everything is still too fresh and no less complex in my mind.  I just hope clarity returns soon, these chaotic thoughts are just too much right now.

I just hope that her surgery was a success and that she can recover completely and return to her husband and children.  May the Gods and Goddesses give them all strength.

Brightest blessings.

Posted by spiritiger at 4:08 PM
Updated: Tuesday, 27 October 2009 5:26 PM
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Monday, 23 March 2009
Dealing With Death
Topic: Life
I believe it is a mockery to say that all women have a corner in the market of being able to openly talk about their feelings. At the very least, it is untrue in my case.  When it comes to grief, I have never been good at participating in an open dialogue about it, and I absolutely dispise crying in front of other people be they strangers or close friends.

I have just found out that my Aunt Carol, who after years of battling cancer, has finally passed away.  She was a funny, vivacious woman who never seemed capable of not smiling, and I admired her a great deal.  She was the kind of woman that never seemed to show her age, and always to me seemed younger than her years could ever prove.  She was the kind of adult that when I was a teenager, I didn't mind hanging out with.

But, I am not a teenager anymore.  I'm 41 with a teenager of my own and now find myself tackling the emotions of anger and feelings of loss that, unfortunately, always accompanies grief.

Death.  We fear it, we fear it will take the ones we love most, yet it is an inarguable inevitability.  We fear talking about it, that somehow the discussion alone might make others view us as morose or morbid.

Take for example our fascination, as a culture, with vampires.  We romanticize the idea of them, because they have immortality.  Death never claims them. Forever young, they conquer time and history to take one lover after the other, like some dark fairytale.  But life is rarely a fairytale.  If anything it is a short story with a predictable end.

Yes, I know I am rambling.  But, as I stated, I have never been good at talking about my "feelings".

Even though I have known for a while now that my Aunt was dying, like many people I didn't really prepare myself for it.  You can say over and over in your head that someone is dying and hope your heart will listen, but it rarely seems to really sink in.  It's as if somewhere deep down there is that silent glimmer of hope in your soul that says "Maybe they can beat it".  So when death comes after even a long battle with disease, you're still as shocked as you would have been had it just come out of the blue.

Memories deceive you as well into thinking death is impossible.  Every time I would think of my Aunt I would see the woman I remembered her to be.  A beautiful, sandy brown haired woman with laughing brown eyes.  Always smiling, always warm, and seemingly always happy.  So when she got sick, I could never envision her as such.  My parents would give me news of her condition and in my mind, Aunt Carol would appear exactly as my memory preserved her to be.  Not the bald, shriveled and sick woman she was.  Even now my mind completely rejects that image.  It's not what I want to remember.  I want to remember what she once was.

Beneath it all, is anger... no rage that this wonderful woman is gone.  It is too soon for her to be gone from this world.  She was the youngest sibling in my dad's family.  No, she wasn't young, but she is too young to be dead.  Before the cancer, she was a very active and very healthy person.  She could have lived as long a life as my great grandmother who died when she was in her mid nineties if weren't for that wretched disease.  I mean, I'm 41 and my grandmother, her mother, is still alive!

I mean, its just impossible for me to balance in my head how a generous and loving mother like her could be taken away so soon and yet this monster Josef Fritzl, well into his seventies who imprisoned his own daughter in a dungeon, raped her repeatedly over the span of twenty-four years and sired seven children with her, nature allows to survive?!  How on earth does that make any sense?!

You've heard all the experts talk about the randomness of tornadoes, right?  That it will hit one house, skip three or four before hitting another house?  That's how I see Cancer.  It will skip the three pack a day smoker who eats nothing but fast food and yet hits the next person who jogs three miles a day, eats all their veggies, and has never smoked or drank a day in their life.

I will give you an example of this.  When I was in high school, the father of one my former boyfriends died after a short battle with Colon Cancer.  The man had never smoked or used tobacco products of any kind, he had never drank alcohol a single day of his life, he jogged everyday and ate healthy.... avoided fast or fatty foods.  Yet at 42 was diagnosed with Colon Cancer.  He died in less than a year of that diagnosis.

My great grandmother who died in her nineties, drank whiskey every morning, ever afternoon, and every evening of her life and never had any serious medical problems until her death of natural causes.

It just doesn't fit into my head.  But then these sort of things never do, and are probably not supposed to.

No, I haven't really cried yet, not to say tears haven't been shed... they just seem few and sporadic to me right now.  They're more like brief quiet expressions than an uncontrolled heaving outcry.  The only reason I think I've allowed them at all is that I am in a room by myself with only the company of my laptop.  If I there were another person in the room with me, I'm not sure they would come at all.  I wish I could explain why I am that way, but the reasons seem locked away even from me.

I still need to call my mom, who is at the moment on her way with my father to Delaware... and I don't really want to at all.  Don't get me wrong, I love my parents very much.  But, we've never been the kind of family that openly expresses grief very well.  We tend to talk about details like; where the funeral is going to be, what cemetery she's going to be buried in, the cost of the casket and so on, not how we are actually feeling.  I'm just not up to the "polite game" yet.  Which is probably why I am unloading all of it here in my blog first.

Anyway, for those who actually read this... I am not completely crazy, just a bit unbalanced on the wire at the moment and I thank you for caring enough to read it.

Brightest blessings.

Posted by spiritiger at 3:59 PM
Updated: Tuesday, 27 October 2009 5:24 PM
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Saturday, 21 March 2009
The Amazon: Dangerous Misconceptions.
Topic: News, politics and Activism

WARNING: The video below is a excerpt from a documentary styled movie depicting a tribe in the Amazon and contains full or partial nudity.  Viewer discretion is advised.

 
I first read about this story this morning on Yahoo! News, and when I learned of the details surrounding this movie, I was more than a little appalled.

For those of you not familiar with the story, I will provide brief quotes and links to the articles.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090320/od_nm/us_indians

[RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – A video made with the help of U.S. missionaries and depicting Amazon Indians burying children alive is "faked" and inciting racial hatred, a group campaigning for tribal rights said Thursday.

It depicts scenes of Indians in an isolated forest village digging graves and burying several live children in them. The "Hakani" campaign also has a website and a group on networking site Facebook with more than 13,000 members.

London-based Survival International said in a statement the film is "faked, that the earth covering the children's faces is actually chocolate cake, and that the film's claim that infanticide among Brazilian Indians is widespread is false."

"People are being taught to hate Indians, even wish them dead," said Survival's director, Stephen Corry.

The video was made by the son of the founder of an American missionary organization called Youth with a Mission, which has a branch in Brazil known as Jocum.

Youth with a Mission is an interdenominational Christian group based in Hawaii which focuses on involving young people in evangelism in 149 countries, its website says.

Infanticide is practiced by some tribes in the Amazon region, sometimes on disabled children, often based on the belief that children who take their last breath above land will come back to haunt a community. But Survival says it is rare and becoming rarer as healthcare access improves.

Brazil's Indian affairs department has tried to bar the film, which it says was financed by Jocum, saying it denigrates the image of the more than 220 ethnicities that live in Brazil.

Neither the video, the "Hakani" campaign website nor the Facebook group include any mention of the missionary group or any contact details. Corry said the group was trying to play down its role in the film.

The video is a "powerful docudrama" and urges people to donate money and write letters in support of a proposed Brazilian law, known as Muwaji's Law, which would abolish infanticide by indigenous groups.

Survival says the law, by requiring Brazilians to report to authorities anything seen as a "harmful traditional" practice, would foster "witch hunts" against indigenous people.

"I think the missionaries are stirring up hatred against the Indians, who they profess to be concerned about," said Fiona Watson, a Brazil campaigner for Survival.

"The infanticide is not being explained; it's being taken out of context."]

I would go further in saying that Muwaji's Law would be an open door for "lawful" removal of children from their culture and families for the sake of "legal adoption".

In a country already dealing with criminal logging and the removal and murder of indigenous people by unscrupulous ranchers in effort to clear more land for cattle, this is not a distraction the Amazon can afford.

http://www.survival-international.org/about/hakani

[If (the infanticide) happened as portrayed, it’s an extraordinary isolated case. After decades of working in Amazonia, we know of no Indian peoples where parents are told to kill their children. It just doesn’t happen.

It’s propaganda to bolster the evangelical campaign for a very dangerous principle, the so-called Muwaji law, which has been presented to the Brazilian Congress.

The Muwaji law focuses on what it calls ‘traditional practices’ and says what the state and citizens must do about them. It says that if anyone thinks there is a risk of ‘harmful traditional practices’, they must report it. If they don’t, they are liable to imprisonment. The authorities must intervene and remove the children and/or their parents. All this because someone, anyone, a missionary for example, claims there is some risk.]

I would advise anyone interested in the plight of the tribes of Amazonia to thoroughly tour Survival International's website.  It gives an unbiased account of the country's political and enviromental situation, and gives information on how to get involved.

So this blog is completely rounded below is a link and information from the Hakani Organization.  Funded by the evangelical group "Youth with a Mission".

http://www.hakani.org/en/synopsis.asp

[Buried alive because her tribe thought she had no soul. Plucked from the grave at the last moment by her brother. Then forced to live as a social outcast for three long years until sickness and neglect brought her once again to the doorway of death... (Remember, however, this story cannot be verified by Hakani's adoptive American parents, the Brazillian Government or by the tribe they claim she was rescued from)

This is the story of Hakani – whose name means "smile" – one of hundreds of children who are targeted for death each year amongst Brazil's 200 plus indigenous tribes. Physical or mental handicaps, being born a twin or triplet or being born out of wedlock – all are considered valid reasons for taking a child's life.]

All these cases of infants and children being buried alive, and yet only this evangelical christian organization has ever reported the issue when there are hundreds of charity based organizations who provide medical and educational support in Amazonia and have never brought this to the world's attention?  Doubtful.

Stephan Corry of Survival International says, "The film and its message are harmful. They focus on what they claim happens routinely in Indian communities, but it doesn’t. It incites feelings of hatred against Indians. Look at the comments on the YouTube site, things like, ‘So get rid of these native tribes. They suck’, and, ‘Those amazon mother f—-ers burrying (sic) little kids, kill them all’. The filmmakers should be ashamed of all the harm this film is doing to the people they are trying to help."

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2008-09-22-infanticide_N.htm

[For the missionaries, "this is part of a strategy to justify their presence on indigenous lands," (Antenor) Vaz (Department of Indian Affairs) says.

He and activists such as (Fiona) Watson (Survival International) are offended by the Hakani movie, which they call racist. "Community actions are taken out of the cultural context and portray the Indians as savages, barbarians," he says.

Evangelical missionaries have emerged as perhaps the greatest threat to the Indians' survival. "I think they are doing a huge amount of harm," Watson says. "They are destroying people's beliefs."

Watson says erasing Indians' traditional faiths destroys their cultures, which have remained self-sufficient for hundreds, if not thousands, of years. "I have seen that," she says, "where a once proud people end up subdued, dependent upon people, because they have lost their beliefs."

Vaz recently completed an investigation into Youth With A Mission. His report accuses the group of "hiding their intent to evangelize" and bribing tribe members with tools and medicine to get them to listen to the Gospel.

The report, without elaboration, accuses the missionaries of slavery, illegally taking blood samples from Indians and illegally removing Indian children.

The missionaries deny that they are using infanticide as a smokescreen for efforts to convert Indians. YWAM members, including Marcia and Edson Suzuki (the adoptive parents of 'Hanaki'), often live with tribes for decades, learning their ancient languages and providing health care and education. Despite their religious orientation, Ribeira says, they do not proselytize.  "Our main mission," she says, "is to provide access to means of survival."

(And yet...)

At one site where YWAM works, deep in the jungle near Porto Velho, an Indian girl wears a Jesus T-shirt.

Francisca Irving, one of the missionaries working there, admits preaching the gospel to Indians. "Yes, we teach Jesus," she says. "I would lie if I told you we didn't talk about Jesus."

The legislative push against infanticide is gaining steam in the Brazilian legislature. One house of the Brazilian legislature has passed a bill that would allow children whose lives are "at risk due to cultural practices" to be removed from their homes.

Vaz says the Department of Indian Affairs is developing a policy.

"Infanticide is a serious issue, which needs to be discussed," he says.  But "this is not a discussion that must only be seen through the Christian perspective."]

What has me bothered most by this legislation of
'Muwaji's Law' is the rush of it over a more educational approach.  Why this demand for a law of a practice that is rare and, in fact, fading in tradition?  Is it impossible to communicate and educate in the language of these tribes that killing infants or children is unnecessary and cruel?  Is there an assumption that because of cultural traditions or perhaps their primitive conditions that education is an impossibility? 

Personally, I believe, if such an assumption exists, that these people have more to teach us than we them.  These are individuals who have lived hundreds (arguably thousands) of years in a tumultuous environment following the same cultural traditions as their ancestors, and despite all odds and adversity have thrived without modern economical advancements such as grocery stores or modern technological advancements such as television, computers, or automobiles.  Inventions that most of us can't imagine existing without.

Yet, aside from much needed medical and scholastic education intervention, the modern world feels compelled to force its religious ideology and dogmas on these unique people in an effort to replace their cultural beliefs.  The very beliefs that make them who they are.

In conclusion, as this is turning into one of my notorious, long winded rants.  How much of cultural, social, and religious history has to be annihilated (See; The Ancient Celts or Native Americans) before we destroy this idea that the entire world must fall in line with one belief system/religion at the cost of all others?  The endless proselytizing of what we all should believe, that seems to always drop the names of 'God' and 'Jesus' concluding only with the word 'Hell'... I am so SICK of it.  I am sick of Christianity, and now, thanks to the Pope's obscene misinformation about condoms aiding in the AIDS epidemic in Africa , I am sick of Catholicism.

"One Nation, under God" sounds more like the accolades of a religious war by crusaders than the patriotic dogma it portrays.  We are not, in fact, one Nation under God, but rather one Nation under Gods, Goddesses and varying belief systems not necessarily of religious roots.  But I suppose that is too wordy for a national motto.

Anyway, brightest blessings, and be well.

Posted by spiritiger at 9:57 AM
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Friday, 20 March 2009
A Beautiful Day and an Update.
Topic: Life
The sun is shining brightly today and it has been beautiful here in Southwestern Indiana the last couple of days.  It is a bit cooler today, but in general the weather has been too nice to have been cooped up indoors so I haven't been at my computer much.

As an update to my well being, I am happy to say that I am over my bout with the flu that had me in bed with 102 degree temperature for a couple of days last week.  I still have a slight cough, but nothing serious and it is going away day to day.

My cat, Hemingway, has been enjoying the birds return to our carport, chattering away as he watches them rebuild their nests.  But what is a thrill to him, is not so much to me as this means that they will be soon, once again, be decorating our vehicles with shades of white and purple.

Seeing as the Pagan Spirit Gathering is approaching in June, Ken and I have been busy in our spare time doing much needed shopping.  Last night, we went to Dick's Sporting Goods and purchased an Easy-Up canopy for my son's tent (Got a heck of a deal on it too, as they were on sale).  I would still like to buy my son a new tent, a table for us to eat on in camp, something more sturdy to put our stove and oven on, and a "kitchen tent" which Ken has been reluctant about getting since we first started attending P.S.G.  We will, of course, be bringing plenty of Mead.

Something a bit odd... when I got on my profile page today I noticed that the myspace music widget had been mysteriously added to it even though I had not changed my settings to 'unhide' it.  Hmmm... strange.  Anyway, when I logged in today, I corrected the error and removed it from appearing on my page.  If anyone reading this is interested in what music I like or I am listening to, there is a link provided on my profile marked 'My Playlist (Click to Listen)' on the right hand side of the page.  It is a safe link to my profile on Gaia Online where my 'Project Playlist' widget is located.  I think the list is about 40+ songs or so long.  I add to it periodically, so you can check back for anything new if you are so inclined.

(( shrugs )) Anyway, that's it for today on 'What's new with Jade'.  I hope everyone is enjoying being on the threshold of Spring and all the beauty that is soon to return to all of us.

Brightest blessings.

Posted by spiritiger at 2:33 PM
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